Tuesday, April 11, 2017

The Abandoned churchyard at Eysey

Last week the Swindon Heritage/Swindon Society team went in
search of the abandoned churchyard at Eysey/Eisey. It’s relatively easy to find
if you know where to look but it is far off the beaten track for cemetery
followers.

The church of St Mary’s dated from the 13th
century but was demolished and rebuilt in 1844.The
parish registers date from 1571, and end in 1947 so as you can imagine there
are a fair few burials in the churchyard. The Victorian church stood empty for
several years before it too was demolished. Today there is evidence of the
boundary wall and some memorials but the whole area is heavily wooded and overgrown.

And of course, as invariably happens when I start
researching, I found a link to the parish of Lydiard Tregoze, although not,
this time, the St John family and Lydiard Park, but the Willis farming family.

Amongst the nettles and fallen trees we found two perfectly
preserved pink granite memorials both apparently dating from the 1920s and
contained in a large family plot.

The inscription on one of the graves reads: In Loving Memory
of Nelly, the dearly beloved wife of Henry John Horton who died at Eysey Manor
Dec. 5th 1924 aged 55 years. On the other side of the memorial the
inscription reads: Also In Loving Memory of Henry John Horton her beloved husband
who died Sept 1st 1924 aged 64 years. The third inscription reads: In loving
memory of Charles James Horton a loving brother & uncle who passed away
Jan. 24th 1947, Aged 79 years.

In the neighbouring grave is a memorial to a mother and son.
The inscription reads: In loving memory of Margaret the dearly beloved wife of
Ernest Willis who died 24th July 1958. Aged 95 years.

On the opposite side of the memorial was the inscription
that would lead me to Lydiard Tregoze.

In Loving Memory of Ernest Willis dearly beloved younger son
of Ernest and Margaret Willis late of Can Court Wilts. July 5th 1891
– Feby 17th 1924 He served in the King’s Own (Royal Lancaster) Regt.
& Royal Air Force throughout the Great War.

The Horton family had nipped back and forth across the
Wiltshire/Gloucestershire county borders, farming at various times at the Manor
Farm, Inglesham, Wiltshire and Broadway Farm at Down Ampney in Gloucestershire.

The Willis family had moved from Stanford in Berkshire to
the parish of Lydiard Tregoze where John Ambrose Willis married farmer’s
daughter Harriet Ellison and raised a large family at Can Court Farm, owned by The
Masters, Fellows, Scholars of Pembroke College, Oxford.

John Ambrose Willis died in 1886 and is buried in the churchyard
at St Mary’s, Lydiard Tregoze. His son Ernest took over the tenancy of the farm
and in 1889 married Margaret Fanny Horton at Down Ampney parish church where a
host of Horton’s are recorded as witnesses at the wedding. That same year
Ernest’s sister Ellen Willis married Margaret’s brother Henry John Horton.

On census night in 1891 Ernest and Margaret Willis are
recorded at Caln Court with their one year old son Edward Ambrose and Ernest’s
brother Henry L. Willis who was visiting with his two children, Sarah and
Robert.

Henry John and Ellen Willis are at Costow Farm, a
neighbouring property across the parish boundary in Wroughton.

By 1901 the Willis family had moved to Caversham where
Ernest worked as a ‘butcher & purveyor’ at 12 Church Street. The family are
still living in Caversham at the time of the 1911 census. Ernest and Margaret
had been married for 22 years. Still living at home was Edward Ambrose, their
eldest son, who worked at a Clerk for the GWR, and their daughter Margaret
Louisa. Younger son Ernest is not recorded with the rest of the family.

Ernest senior died the following year. He may be buried in
the large family plot in Eisey, perhaps mentioned on the kerbstone that
surrounds the two large memorials.

In 1911 Henry John and Ellen were living at Eisey Manor where
Ellen (Nelly) died in 1920 and Henry John four years later. Henry John left
£43,648 17s 9d with probate granted to his brother Charles James Horton and his
three sons Robert Willis Horton, Henry Horton and Charles Horton.

Margaret, meanwhile, moved back to Swindon and a house in
Westlecott Road. The son with whom she is buried died at the Sanatorium Linford
Hampshire in 1924, most probably from the effects of his military service.

On the eve of the Second World War Margaret was still living
at Southwood, Westlecott Road with her bachelor brother Charles J. Horton. Charles
died in 1947 and Margaret in 1958 aged 95.

Good Gentlewoman

This blog began life as Status, Scandal and Subterfuge, a story about the St John ladies of Lydiard Park, Wiltshire. However, the Ladies have proved so fascinating that I have extended my research to other branches of the family and launched this new website Good Gentlewoman.